It appears that HIS is no longer the only firm to offer a single-slot Radeon RX 460 as XFX has its own Radeon RX 460 Core Edition that will be available in both 2GB and 4GB versions.

Spotted by Videocardz.com, the XFX RX 460 uses a slim single-slot cooler with a 70mm fan which should keep the smaller Polaris 11 GPU well cooled. It uses a red and black color scheme on the shroud and features DVI, HDMI 2.0b and DisplayPort 1.4 outputs.

The new XFX RX 460 Core Edition will be available in 2GB and 4GB GDDR5 versions. Both versions are sticking to AMD reference clocks, 1090MHz GPU base, 1220MHz GPU Boost while 128-bit interface memory ended up clocked at 7.0GHz. As this is a Radeon RX 460 graphics card, it does not need an additional PCIe power connector, drawing enough power from the PCIe slot to satisfy its 75W TDP.

Bear in mind that XFX is also the only AMD AIB partner that offers a passive cooler Radeon RX 460, although with a large 2-slot heatsink.

Unfortunately, there is no information on the price or the availability date for the new single-slot XFX RX 460 Core Edition.

XFX has unveiled two passively cooled Radeons for HTCP lovers and just about everyone else who appreciates silence and can live without jaw dropping graphics.

The R7 240 Core Edition and R7 250 Core Edition cards feature passive coolers with the usual combination of copper heatpipes and aluminium fins. Both cards are based on the Oland core.

The R7 240 features 320 GCN cores clocked at 780MHz base to 900MHz in boost mode. The TDP is just 30W, which means it can get away with a low profile PCB and heatsink. The downside? It uses DDR3 memory, although it ships with 2GB of memory. It’s priced at €75.

The 250 has 384 cores and it’s clocked at 1050MHz and 1150MHz boost. The TDP stands at 65W and it is a full profile card. It should sell for €90 to €95.

Going hard with the launch of the AMD Radeon HD 7700 series, XFX decided to launch no less than nine different models starting with Core Edition based on AMD reference clock and all the way up to SuperOverclock Edition that we had a chance to review today.

The XFX Radeon HD 7770 includes a total of five models that start with XFX HD 7770 Core Edition featuring AMD reference 1000MHz GPU and 4.5GHz memory clocks paired up with XFX's Ghost Technology cooler with a single center placed dust-free IP-5X fan, as well as solid state capacitors and XFX exclusive bracket. The next in line are two cards that are a part of XFX's Standard Edition, the XFX FX-777A-ZDB4 Black Edition Double Dissipation card with a dual-slot dual-fan cooler that is overclocked to 1095MHz for the GPU and 4.98GHz for 1GB of GDDR5 memory and the XFX FX-777A-ZNBC with Ghost Technology, which is pretty much identical as the Core Edition but with same 1095MHz GPU and 4.98GHz memory overclock.

The Double Dissipation Edition includes a single FX-777A-ZDF4 model that is pretty much the same as the Black Edition one mentioned earlier as it uses the same dual-slot dual-fan cooler but lacks the factory overclock so it is set to work at 1000MHZ for the GPU and 4.5GHz for memory. The last but not least, is the cream of the crop, Black Edition series FX-777A-ZDSC Super Overclock card that we had a chance to review earlier. This one works at impressive 1120MHz for the GPU and 5.2GHz for the same 1GB of GDDR5 memory paired up with a 128-bit memory interface.

The XFX 7750 lineup is pretty much the same but includes "only" four models, Core Edition, Double Dissipation Edition, Black Edition and Black Edition with Double Dissipation. As you could have guessed, both Black Edition cards will feature a factory-overclock that is currently unknown as the core clock is still TBD. The Core Edition and Double Dissipation Edition are both set at 800MHz for the GPU and 4.5GHz for 1GB of GDDR5 memory and are differentiated by the cooler, one with a single fan and other with dual-fan cooler.

The entire XFX lineup is a bit of confussing but thankfully, the XFX site have them all listed in one place and it is easy to find the right model for yourself.